|
Yvonne Okoro |
Nollywood is in trouble. We open this session with this
alarmist line, designed not to spread panic but to provoke reflection by those
who care about my industry and the joy, recognition, fame and wealth it has
brought to all of us who have been so fortunate to be players in this team.
I like football and one of the national teams that have
always put a smile on my face and the faces of Nigerians is the female national
team. Yes they never did rise to the pinnacles of greatness in the different
world cups they have taken part in, but for years they bestrode the African
continent like other national teams were brought to make up the numbers in
football competitions. They achieved results like a 7-1 hammering of mighty
Cameroon, a 5-1 mauling of Ghana, a 6-2 destruction of South Africa so it was
best imagined what happened to teams like hapless Ethiopia and the likes of
Benin Republic. Nigerians were so sure of a win every time the girls took to
the pitch that the first question one asked if he came in from outside when the
girls were playing was “how many goals have they scored?” It never crossed our
minds that they could lose one day; then it happened. Ghana beat us 2-1, a
fluke we said, Cameroon beat us, a mistake we all intoned, South Africa beat us, an accident we thought
but that was before Lilliputians like Equatorial Guinea put their fingers in
our eyes and took our birth right, the African cup from us and we finally ran
out of excuses.
|
AMAA |
So you ask yourself what is Reginald rambling about again
today?. What does football have to do with Nollywood? Everything! Both are
forms of entertainment, both have brought immense honour and recognition to our
country and in both we are called the GIANTS OF AFRICA.
Nollywood, the Nigerian movie industry of course was
birthed, nurtured and matured in Nigeria. Like fine wine we sent it out to the
rest of Africa and used it as a tool for neo-colonialism. Africa started
dressing like us, acquired and spoke our style of Pidgin English, dressed like
us, imbibed our cultures and traditions. Even our cities in the hinterlands
became massively popular. So when Peace Fiberisima nee Anyiam Osigwe introduced
the African Movie Academy Awards(AMAA) we all smirked and tongue in cheek, we
laughed at the rest of Africa. We felt that she should have just simply called it the
Nigerian Movie Academy Awards. I mean which other country would win any awards
in an Nollywood inspired award program apart from the home of Nollywood,
Nigeria. What we did not understand is that when children grow, they leave home.
And if the truth be told, Nollywood has left home.
At the 2013 AMAA awards, Nigeria won 7 awards out of the 21
given out. Good news you might say but consider the fact that out of those
seven awards only one of them was in what you will consider the most serious
areas of movie making. Rita Dominic picked up the Best Actress in a Leading
Role award for her work in the movie SHATTERED. It is of note here that
SHATTERED is a Kenyan movie. The six most important areas of film making went
to people from outside Nollywood.
1.
Achievement in Cinematography went to South
Africa with OTELO BURNING.
2.
Achievement in Screenplay, -my area of
strength- went to Ghana with TIES THAT BIND.
3.
Best
Actor in a Leading Role went to Ghana’s Majid Michael for his work in SOMEWHERE
IN AFRICA, a Ghanian production.
4.
Best
Director went again to South Africa with Charlie Vundla’s HOW TO STEAL 2
MILLION
5.
Best Film of course was also won by Charlie
Vundla with HOW TO STEAL 2 MILLION
|
Rita Dominic. |
Nigeria the film making giant of Africa like our Super
Falcons, were left with the crumbs. So we all gather together in our offices
and declare that AMAA has sold out Nollywood on the altar of afrocentricism.
Those rhetorics are only but balm for our wounded pride, temporary anaesthetics
for a permanent migraine that will not go away. This year a Ghanain/Nigerian Yvonne
Okoro, working from Ghana has been nominated in five different categories and
who is to say she will not win all. So a few weeks back we all jumped into the
plane and headed out to Malawi on the auspices of the same AMAA we condemn, we
dined with the President and she praised the work we are doing in Nollywood,
temporary praise for a brand that is in trouble. Nollywood wake up before we
become the minnow of African movie making. It will be sad if we gather again in
Bayelsa State this year and give out our prices to the rest of Africa and all
that we will go home with will be THE BEST CHILD ACTOR.